Journal COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1911. EntrM ftt th pofltofftiw ftt r1nvlll VOL. XV NO. 18 Crook County PRINEYILLE'S POPULATION Not as Large at Ex pected. 1910 CENSUS SAYS ITS 1042 But lU a Hummer for to Sii Big Volume of Business Don Her. The 1910 census report (Wei Prineville population of 1042 against 650 io 1W0. At least 200 Nople have been added to our population linoe the lut oenaui iu taken. While title increase during the pant Urn yean li not at great a tome expected, we venture the annertioo that there U not another town In the itate of equal iIm that hai made aa many remanent im provement! within thi pait ten yeara a hu prinevllle. Tbii town hai enjoyed a iteady growth from every point of view, aa shown by our big brick and atone atructuree; our churchei, our achoola and bandsonu homes. Tbla iteady and permanent expansion U still going on. There ii not a vaoant house In the city and the demand cannot be supplied. In lome In stances three famillM ere oocu pylng one home. Many building 1 Same bottom can be had in walking plows. projects are In course of con struction or In contemplation for the oomlng summer. Bids are be ing asked for in this issue for the construction of a new $20,000 pub lie school building. The Crook County Hank li only waiting for the removal of Belknap Hall be fore it begins the construction of a handsomi new building. May 29 we vots on the erection of a new olty ball that will be an ornament to the town. The Itsptist people will finish their new stone bouse of worship this summer. A sewer age lystem for the town Is receiv ing thoughtful consideration, while the grading of streets has already been taken op by the city oounell. What does all this mean? It means that Prinevllle is a sub stantial, growing town that is here to stay. It means that it i the supply center for a large territory that come here to trade. It means that we have the best schools in this section of the state. It means that the present year will bring to Prinevllle one of the greater periods of growth that it hai ever enjoyed. A Good Buy. House and six lots for sale. Denir al'la property. A bargain. Inquire at this olUce. 4-U lm Horses for Sale. Two t-vesr-olil filllw, big ones ; aim f- year-oM mare, 14(10 Hit., broke gentle. Inquire o(Kd. Hmlth. 4-13 House end Lot for Sale. Io flltli addition to Prinevllle; well rinUhed and wall furnished. Inquire ol Mrs. Maude Ixng, Urluly, (Jr. 4-13 lm Get information and prices on the New Kentucky Drill. We guarantee it as good as any Drill made. We sell it at less profit than other drills are sold. Collies Wo Elkins Prineville, Oregon. MONEY FOR THE DISTRICTS IN Table Showing Assessable Values, Road Tax and Amount Available to Each this Year The following table shows the total district, the amount of road tax and the lr cent) for uaa by the road supervisor of each district. Kach road district is allowed 3 ltt-'JO mills on the aseeMable prorty of the district for road purposes. These figures were taken from tbe 11110 Itoad District No. J Ireland, Total Uxable proerty. $ 4ill.lM.00 240,479.00 J-IIend 4 Montgomery 6-Black Uutte 6 IIaystack.... 7 McKay 8 Hay Creek. -Willow Creek 10 Trots Keys 11 -Ashwoud IS-ItowiintM 13 Johnson Creek 14 Mill Creek . 15 -llowsrd 10 Summit K(. 873.00 U52.282.00. 310.4ltt.00 809,(185.00 152,8.12.00 158,175.00 78,745.00 418,199.00 975.116.00 130.021.00 233,537.00 185,330.00 200,430.00 293,050.00 287.550.00 142,425.00 813,34300., 143,203.00 210,335.00 40(1,511.00 17-llear Creek 18 Camp Creek.. 10-llardin 20 Heaver. 21 Maury 22 Newsora 23 Kuklier 24 Broeite 25 Powell Butte ... 27 ltedinond 2-Uidlaw 29 Ijimonta 30 I.yle Gap 32 I-avs 90,229.00... 84,959.00... S33,7:.00.. 433,780.00.... 219,379.00... 91,392.00... 225,8H4.00.. Will Plow in Any Ground I The New Oliver Gang, in either 12 or 14 in. bottoms. "DoiV bie" clay, loam, gravel or sod slips off the No. 222 moulboard and - leaves it bright as a mirror. 29 ROAD CROOK COUNTY amonnt of taxable property to each road amount available under the statute (50 tax mils: Koad Tax ..11,940.00 : . 950.00 . 332.00 4,550.00 . 1,220.00 1,224.00 . 604.00 . 024.00 . 304.00 . 1(152.00 Amount Available . 970.00 475.00 1.00 . 2,275.00 013.00 812.00 802.00 812.00 152.00 82000 1928.00 . 257.00 . 4(11.00 3(16.00 396.00 fWO.OO 5(i8.00 281.00 019.00 283.00 415.00 921.00 , 178.00 168.00 059.00 857.00 433.00 180.00 446.00 3852.00 614.00 922.00 732.00 792.00 110.00 1130.00 602.00 1238.00 500.00 8.10.00 1842.00... 356.00 336.00 1318.00 1714.00 8(10.00 3(10.00 892.00 ANNUAL MEETING COMMERCIAL CLUB Retiring Officers Make Good Report MEMBERSHIP NEARLY DOUBLED The Club is Out of Debt and in the Hae Over $400 Treasury. There was a large attendance at the annual meeting of tbe Prineville Commercial Club Tues day evening. Tbe retiring officers made a splendid showing of work accomplished and received the unanimous voteol approval of tbe club membership. Tbe secretary's report showed tbe total receipts to be 14836.61. Disbursements, 14400:76. Cash on hand, 1435.85. Seventy-seven new members were added during tbe year; 19 were dropped, making tbe present membership in good standing, 154. Tbe following directors were chosen to conduct the affairs of the club: J. B. Shipp, D. P. Adamson, Dr. Rosenberg, J. H. Quinn, J. 11. Haner. President Williamson, in his ad dress, told of the things done and left undone by his co-laborers. His remarks were replete with wit and humor and lots of good hard com mon sense. In part hs said: "It hae been thooght proper by the outgoing directorate that I should briefly summarize our sue ceeses and our failures during tbe past year for your edification. More especially was this thought appropriate from the fact that the present membership of this body is composed of near one-halt new members the membership having nearly doubled during the past year. At the beginning of the year a more or less vague idea existed in the minds of this community that the time had coma when our here tofore isolated community should, in some manner, receive its ehare of publio notice that something should be done in the line of what is popularly termed publicity. The then outgoing directorate had begun the work by assembling what is known as the "Heart of Oregon" folder, some samples of which had then arrived. At the annual meeting one year ago, we were all of one mind touching the necessity of action in the matter of publicity work. We were all Hgreed that something should be done, but when it came to a defi nite line of action we were all about in the same boat While we were convinced that something should be done, we were all more or less hazy as to what that some thing consisted in. Those who have gone before have found, and those who will follow after will find, that the pub licity feature of this organization is both costly and laborious. It costs both money and diligent ef fort to attend to publicity work. During the past year fully one half of the fund raised for this pur pose has been expended in estab lishing mail routes and building roads leading into and out of Prineville. Our chief effort in the line of ad vcrtising the agricultural and other resources of Crook county has consisted in assembling and forwarding to the Great Northern Agency at Portland about a ton of samples of cereals and grasses of all kinds in the sheaf. These samples were subdivided at the Portland office and an exhibit made at St. Paul, Chicago and Omaha and the balance placed in the Great Northern exhibit car which has shown all through the East during tbe fall and winter More than half of our letters of in quiry from the East during the past three months have referred to the Crook County Exhibit in this car, thus clearly proving the value of this method of advertising. Having used op what is known as the "Heart of Oregon" circular some time ago, we have prepared and had published ten thousand copies of another booklet entitled "Central Oregon" at a total ex pense of $100, which we are now using for answering many letters of inquiry. Tbe Great Northern Railway baa requested thirty thousand copies of this booklet for their own use and it might be well enough to consider the propo sition. It appearing that we could buy insurance by the wholesale cheap er than in small quantities we bought and paid for three years'! insurance on the club property, which pays for the past, the pres ent, and the coming year and will not expire until 1913. We contributed $50 toward de fraying the expense of Mr. Till man Reuter's display at the World's Dry Farming Congress at Billings, Montana, last fall, which display, as you know, received the highest award. We have also be gun tbe work of assisting Mr. Reuter in preparing bis exhibit at Omaha during the coming October and have set aride a fund of $150 for tbe purpose of completing and assembling the exhibit. It is fair to state, that we have requested, and Mr. Reuter has agreed, tbat such exhibit shall be known as the Crook County exhibit instead of the Madras exhibit. After one prolonged effort ex tending throughout the year, we have finally succeeded in getting a brass band started on a permanent footing, and if I am within the proprieties, want to suggest to the incoming directorate, in Heaven's name keep it goings for, of all the experiences connected with our past year's work, we have suffered more vexatious disappointments on this score than on any other. Whether or not ' the Annex should be the prefix to the Prine ville Commercial Club was a ques tion that came op for discussion and was decided in the negative early in tbe year. After due con' sideration it was determined, that as long as we had our sign out and were pretending to carry on a Com mercial Club, we would either carry on a club or take down the sign and close the doors. Thus we have proceeded during the year. Not a dollar have we allowed con tributed either by the Ladies' An nex or by any of our schools or volunteer fire companies toward the maintenance ol this organiza tion during the past year. -In' stead, we have tendered through out the year, entirely free of charge, tbe use of the hall above both to the schools and the fire companies, and have just com pleted and paid for, a comforfable home for the Ladies' Annex at I cost of, approximately, with ad ditions to the library, Borne $400. Through the officers of the Annex, we have been notified that the ladies desire to arrange, and fur nish their own rooms, which privi lege was granted them. It is no more than proper to note in this connection, that ' notwithstanding these concessions, the proceeds from hall rentals during the past year have been more than double that of any year in the history of this club. I hope no one will consider that I am speaking in a commendatory vein of the accomplishments of the outgoing directorate. lrue, we have done some things and leave not a aeot or obligation ol any kind, save the bonded indebted ness, behind us to our knowledge. xet no one Knows better than we that what we have done is a tale soon told, and what we have left undone would fill a good Bized volume. . I only want to refer to our fail ure to complete the building dur ing the year by painting it and finishing the upper story. So many plans have been suggested for ceiling the hall above that want to say just a word on that subject. That large roof should never have any more weight swung to it. instead, a lumber oeihng should be put in so as to Continued on page two. TILLMAN REUTER'S LITTLE FARM Surprises Even the Old- Timer. CULTIVATION THE SECRET Addison Bennett Write to the Oregonian of the Thing He Sew. The Oregon Trunk, or Hill line. s really a branch of the North Bank road; and when the new bridge is in operation across the Columbia at Fallbridge and the new Crooked River bridge is completed, tbe run will be con- inuous from Portland to Bend, and the time around seven hours. Special equipment will be pro vided, such as dining and observ ation cars and no stops will be for meals. At present meals are ' taken at Nathan, about 36 miles North of Madras. Like other Hill road in Oregon,, the Des chutes road's equipment will then bear the lettering or name of the Spokane, Portland h Se attle Railroad. The new Columbia River bridge is in one respect the most pecular structure of the kind in the country. It is about 4000 feet long and will be constructed on cement piers, yet not one of them has a footing in water each end being on solid rock. There is no other place on the river where a bridge could be erected so firmly and so econom- cally. The piers are all now done, much of the steel for the superstructure is on the ground and more is arriving every day. So the ferry will be abandoned in the very near future, perhaps before June 1. The trains from the soutbr bank run a temporary track for few miles, to a point near Moody, where it joins the track. which runs down to the new bridge. Then for a long distance tho Hill road winds along the west bank of the Deschutes and the Harriman along the east bank. Seventy-five miles up the river ' from Fallbridge, at North Junc tion, the two roads come togather and run over a joint track to South Junction, a distance of 10.4 miles. Here the Harriman road swings off to the east, and the Hill road follows up the Deschutes a short distence and then goes up the Willow, Creek canyon to Madras. The Harriman road crosses the Agency Plains country . and swings to the west above Madras, the station for that place being a couple of hundred feet above the town, and then it crosses Willow Creek just at the mouth of the canyon, and, of course (Continued on page two.) HAS NO SUBSTITUTE Absolutely Pure Tha only baking powtlor made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar K3 ALUM.NQ LIME PHOSPHATE . J!! !